Yeah, that's right. [ She nods with utmost confidence in herself before clearing her throat. ]
You see, the components of a phone - or to be more specific, a smart phone - are somewhat similar to that of a computer. Of course, the specs of a computer are much higher, as well as the memory, hard drive, CPU... amongst other things. But the most important thing that they have in common is the circuit board, or rather the hardware. While the size of the circuit board of a computer and a laptop are different, it doesn't change their functionality by much -- as long as the phone has enough memory and ram to run the software, the phone itself can run it. But since a phone is limited in its functionality, it can't do certain tasks that you'd be able to do on a regular computer. Does that make ay sense?
no subject
You see, the components of a phone - or to be more specific, a smart phone - are somewhat similar to that of a computer. Of course, the specs of a computer are much higher, as well as the memory, hard drive, CPU... amongst other things. But the most important thing that they have in common is the circuit board, or rather the hardware. While the size of the circuit board of a computer and a laptop are different, it doesn't change their functionality by much -- as long as the phone has enough memory and ram to run the software, the phone itself can run it. But since a phone is limited in its functionality, it can't do certain tasks that you'd be able to do on a regular computer. Does that make ay sense?